February 18, 2014 11:59am ESTFebruary 18, 2014 11:59am ESTTransfers are a touchy subject in Barcelona right now. However, with the Catalans taking on Manchester City in the Champions League, it is nigh on impossible to avoid thinking about the deal that saw Yaya Toure swap Camp Nou for the Etihad in 2010.Yaya Toure(AP Images)

Mike Slane

Published on Feb. 18, 2014

Feb. 18, 2014

Transfers are a touchy subject in Barcelona right now. However, with the Catalans taking on Manchester City in the Champions League, it is nigh on impossible to avoid thinking about the deal that saw Yaya Toure swap Camp Nou for the Etihad in 2010.

Of course, that is solely because in the intervening four years the Ivorian has proven himself one of the most complete midfielders in world football. Which begs the question: why on earth did the Blaugrana let him go?

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Toure is in no doubt as to where the blame lies. When pressed on his exit in October 2011, he made it clear that then Barca boss Pep Guardiola had effectively forced him out.

"Whenever I asked him something, he always gave strange answers," Toure told ONA FM. "He pretty much ignored me until City's offer came in. That's why I eventually opted to leave. I didn't speak to Guardiola for a year.

"If he had talked to me, I would have stayed at Barcelona. I did not want to go and wanted to end my career at Barcelona. However, he had no faith in me."

Guardiola, though, offered a rapid riposte, saying that he, in conjunction with then president Joan Laporta, had done his utmost to persuade Toure to remain at Camp Nou.

"I talk to anyone and the doors to my office and house are always open for the players," the former Spain international told AS. "The truth is that [Toure] asked Laporta to leave. We even tried to convince him to stay."

Clearly someone is being economical with the truth. Certainly, Toure's love for Barcelona has always appeared sincere. In the first couple of years after his exit, he repeatedly spoke of his desire to return to Catalunya one day, while he dismissed talk of a transfer to Real Madrid in 2012 by explaining that such a move would be unthinkable given he still considered himself a Barcelona fan.

However, there is no doubt that Toure was drawn to Manchester City for a variety of reasons, chief among them the presence of his brother Kolo at the Etihad at the time. There was also the astronomical wage on offer (a basic package of 170,000 euros a week, excluding extremely lucrative performance bonuses), as well as the guarantee of regular first-team football. As a bit-part player at Barcelona, Toure was undeniably seduced by the promise pitched to him by City's former chief executive, Gary Cook, that he would become a legend at the Etihad.

From Barcelona's perspective, incoming president Sandro Rosell was keen to balance the books at Camp Nou and was quite content to accept €30 million for a player who was essentially a reserve. Indeed, in his final season in Catalunya, Toure largely served as an understudy to Sergio Busquets, something he subsequently admitted to having found very difficult to take.

"Without Busquets, I would not have left," he conceded in October 2010. "He has great quality but what I want are games, not sitting on the bench. I won everything there and needed other challenges."

He has certainly risen to those challenges, though it helped that he went from feeling under appreciated to adored. Former City boss Roberto Mancini built his team around Toure, playing an integral role in the Ivorian's transformation from a defensive midfielder to a box-to-box colossus.

It is worth noting that Toure netted only six times in all competitions in three seasons at Barcelona - yet he managed 10 in his first campaign at City alone. Of course, Toure had played in a more advanced position during his time at Monaco but he was only truly set free by Mancini.

"It was he who decided to put me more forward," the three-time African Football of the Year said in February of last year. "Since coming to City I have enjoyed my football more because my game is all about attack and what I did at Barcelona was quite different."

The Blaugrana's decision to sell Toure must therefore rank as one of their more expensive errors, particularly when one considers that two supposed replacements, Javier Mascherano and Alex Song, were subsequently signed at a combined cost of €42 milliion. That Guardiola failed to see - let alone unleash - Toure's full potential is also strange, given this is the coach that has successfully turned Bayern Munich captain Philipp Lahm from a fullback into a holding midfielder.

Of course, that is if you pay no heed to the Catalan's claims that he tried in vain to persuade Toure to stay at Camp Nou. Truth be told, it is hard to know who to believe.

Instead, maybe it is just best to think of the time that former Brazil forward Ronaldo appeared before a congressional hearing in 2001 to give his views on the country's struggling national team and vowed: "I will tell you my truth ... But there are many truths."

In this instance, Toure has his version of the truth, Guardiola has his. All we can know for certain is that in the summer of 2010 Barcelona lost a great player - and Manchester City gained one.